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NEW RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS AI’S EMERGING ROLE AS CATALYST FOR HARVESTING AND UNIFYING DISPARATE DATA ESSENTIAL TO CUSTOMER ENGAGEMENT

New CMO Council Study Reveals Deficiencies in How Marketing, Commerce and Supply Chain Leaders Integrate Data to Create Deeper, More Valued Customer Relationships

(SAN JOSE, Calif. - July 10, 2018)

Whether you’re an executive at the source of product supply, in the engine room of shopper attraction, or at the point of commercial transaction, AI-enriched data analysis has now become essential to customer engagement success.

According to a new CMO Council survey of 165 senior executives, 78 percent are looking to implement tools enriched and driven by artificial intelligence (AI) in the next 12 months. Not only are these executives committing to AI, but 33 percent of those who will implement AI believe it will be the solution that delivers the greatest impact on operations and customer engagement.

This turn to AI is not surprising considering the issues across data accessibility and quality that plague the organization’s ability to do much more with the data being amassed across systems. Thirty-seven (37) percent of all executives surveyed feel that the current state of data accessibility is hit or miss, at best, limited by selective connections across functions, systems and platforms. Once data is accessed, executives are further pressed to identify usable data as 39 percent of executives admit that data is often incomplete or only partially integrated across systems.

Among the top data issues that executives highlight in the study are:

68 percent of leaders admit that second- and third-party data are only partially or barely integrated into current data systems, providing an incomplete view of a connected customer’s relationship with a product or brand.

Dark data—defined for this study as unstructured, untagged and untapped data that has typically not been analyzed or processed—has frustrated stakeholders who are struggling to turn this data into actionable intelligence. Some 36 percent of respondents have yet to even tackle the issue of dark data while 30 percent admit that this valuable yet inaccessible data has emphasized how much the organization collects, but how little it actually uses.

Instead of streamlining operations, data has forced teams to spend massive amounts of time managing, manipulating or manually exporting and importing spreadsheets and reports. Other operational black holes of mundane tasks include content management and tagging (a time drain for 66 percent of respondents), journey mapping (41 percent), and forecasting (56 percent).

“The question is not if data is important for any organization with customers…it is if the ability to do more with that data will mean the difference in engagement, profitability and success,” noted Liz Miller, Senior Vice President of Marketing for the CMO Council. “Each of the functions we surveyed has their own lens that colors and enhances their view into the organization’s data; marketing, supply chain and commerce will all interpret the subtle shadows and light differently, but in the end, they need to be looking at the same picture.”

While the disparate state of data has revealed gaps in both talent and technology, it is actually a third “T” that has been most elusive: time. Some 45 percent say that there are just not enough hours in the day to address all of the transformation projects that are needed to activate data. But this is the exact issue that many executives hope that new tools like AI can address and resolve, leveraging tools to ingest, analyze and recommend action in real-time, regardless of platform, channel or functional owner.

Data for the study was compiled through an online survey in the second quarter of 2018. A total of 165 executives completed the 20-question online audit, with 44 percent of respondents holding marketing roles, 24 percent from supply chain and operations, and 19 percent from commerce. Thirty-six (36) percent of respondents hail from organizations with more than $1 billion USD in annual revenue. Respondents represent a multitude of primarily consumer-facing industries, including retail (11 percent), consumer packaged goods (8 percent), manufacturing and consumer durables (9 percent), and media and entertainment (9 percent). Some 43 percent of respondents are with organizations with a hybrid (B2B2C) selling model, with 22 percent selling exclusively directly to the consumer.

Insights in the report include:

Technologies on the 12-month roadmap and potential roadblocks to implementation and deployment success

Key data sources across the organization that are currently part of the customer data value chain and which sources of intelligence are just out of reach yet critical to engagement success

Strategies to ensure cross-functional participation in the data value chain, including measures and metrics that define the impact of data application and utilization

Success or failures of technologies and platforms already deployed to aggregate, manage and analyze data across the organization

The 107-page full report, now available by visiting https://www.cmocouncil.org/thought-leadership/reports/doing-more-with-data, features a key summary of findings, including an analysis of differences in reaction and perception across marketing, commerce and supply chain executives and in-depth best-practice interviews with leaders from brands including Nordstrom, Lamps Plus, REI, Ryder, The Body Shop, AT&T, TD Bank and more.

About the CMO Council

The Chief Marketing Officer (CMO) Council is dedicated to high-level knowledge exchange, thought leadership and personal relationship building among senior corporate marketing leaders and brand decision-makers across a wide-range of global industries. The CMO Council's 15,000-plus members control more than $500 billion in aggregated annual marketing expenditures and run complex, distributed marketing and sales operations worldwide. In total, the CMO Council and its strategic interest communities include more than 65,000 global marketing and sales executives in more than 110 countries covering multiple industries, segments and markets. Regional chapters and advisory boards are active in the Americas, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Middle East and Africa. The CMO Council's strategic interest groups include the Customer Experience Board, Digital Marketing Performance Center, Brand Inspiration Center, Marketing Supply Chain Institute, GeoBranding Center, and the Coalition to Leverage and Optimize Sales Effectiveness (CLOSE).